Latest AI News

AI’s 2026 Capabilities Meet Their Limits

AI’s 2026 Capabilities Meet Their Limits

In 2026, artificial intelligence can draft emails, summarize meetings, write code, and create caricatures, yet it still falls short in several key areas. Large language models often hallucinate, presenting fabricated facts with confidence. They struggle with simple counting tasks, lack the lived experience needed for therapy, cannot update knowledge in real time, and remain unable to truly understand human nuance. Recognizing these boundaries helps users apply AI tools responsibly and avoid costly mistakes.

AI System Shows Ability to Reidentify Anonymous Online Accounts

AI System Shows Ability to Reidentify Anonymous Online Accounts

Researchers from ETH Zurich, Anthropic and the Machine Learning Alignment and Theory Scholars program have built an automated AI system that can link pseudonymous online profiles to real identities. Using large language models to analyze writing style, posting patterns and other clues, the system correctly matched up to 68 percent of accounts with 90 percent precision, far outpacing traditional methods. The experiment cost only a few dollars per profile, highlighting a low‑cost barrier for large‑scale deanonymization. The study warns that online anonymity may be less secure than many assume, especially as AI capabilities continue to improve.

Anthropic Resumes Negotiations with U.S. Defense Department Over AI Contract

Anthropic Resumes Negotiations with U.S. Defense Department Over AI Contract

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has re‑opened talks with the U.S. Defense Department after a dispute over contract language concerning the use of the company’s AI models for bulk data analysis. The disagreement stemmed from a clause the Pentagon wanted removed, which Anthropic feared could enable mass surveillance. The department had threatened to label Anthropic a supply‑chain risk and cancel its existing agreement, a move that previously led to a presidential directive to halt the use of its technology. Both parties are now working to resolve the language issue and preserve the partnership.

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei Returns to Pentagon Negotiations to Preserve Defense Deal

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei Returns to Pentagon Negotiations to Preserve Defense Deal

Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei is back at the negotiating table with the U.S. Department of Defense after talks collapsed over the Pentagon’s demand for unrestricted access to the company’s Claude AI models. The renewed discussions aim to prevent a supply‑chain‑risk designation that could bar Anthropic from future defense work. The dispute centers on the department’s push for open‑use language and Anthropic’s refusal to compromise on two red lines: prohibiting mass surveillance of Americans and banning lethal autonomous weapons without human oversight.

OpenAI Brings Codex Native App to Windows

OpenAI Brings Codex Native App to Windows

OpenAI has launched a native Codex application for Windows, giving developers a dedicated AI coding companion that runs directly on the operating system. The app offers project management, skill integration, background automation, and support for multiple work trees, all built on PowerShell within a Windows sandbox. Developers can also switch the coding agent and terminal to Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) or use a WinUI skill from the skill gallery. The Codex app is available for download from the Microsoft Store or OpenAI’s website, and users can sign in with an existing ChatGPT subscription or an API key.

Google Search AI Mode Adds Canvas Coding and Project Workspace

Google Search AI Mode Adds Canvas Coding and Project Workspace

Google has expanded the Canvas feature inside AI Mode, its Gemini‑powered conversational search experience. The update lets users draft documents, plan projects, and now build simple code‑based tools and interactive apps directly within the search interface. Canvas is available to all users in the United States in English, offering a side‑panel workspace where prompts and follow‑up questions refine code, debug issues, and pull information from the web and Google’s knowledge graph. The enhancement turns Search into a versatile creation hub for writing, coding, and planning tasks.